Today in New York, four new members of the Baseball Hall of Famer were introduced. First time candidates Randy Johnson, John Smoltz and Pedro Martinez and Craig Biggio in his third year on the ballot make up the largest class of Hall of Famers since the 1950s.

For most people history stays in the past as a distance memory, or a story handed down from generations. For a small hidden town called Cooperstown in upstate New York, history comes alive once a year for Hall of Fame weekend. Baseball greats are immortalized in this town that is as much a part of baseball as hotdogs and cracker jacks. A year removed from a Hall of Fame weekend that didn’t see a single person inducted, six baseball greats came to Cooperstown to take their rightful place in history.

Kenny Ducey and Eric Mollo discuss everything surrounding the Yankees, from Mariano's retirement to free agency and A-Rod's appeal hearing. They also talk about the recent brawl between the Braves and Brewers, the worst K/BB ratio in 30 years, and much more!

Kenny Ducey and Kris Venezia discuss the return of Andy Pettitte, and the imminent signing of Mariano Rivera to pinstripes. They also dive into the David Wright contract talks and discuss BJ Upton's new home in Atlanta.

In sports, it usually takes three of something to deem it a streak, especially in baseball where there’s a number for everything. Maybe it’s just a coincidence that for the second consecutive year we’ve been given a baseball film in late September (recall last year’s Moneyball, the Oscar nominated Billy Beane memoir). This year’s diamond flick, Trouble With The Curve, besides a similar release date examines more front office dynamics, but this time with a slap back at the sabermetric world, balancing front office order by chronicling an aging scout who believes in evaluating players without those hokey computers.

The guys take calls on the Yankees, who've won two series in a row, and hear from WFUV Yankees Beat Reporter Alex Smith on how the team's looking heading into a series against Toronto. They also check in on the Mets and discuss the A's and Angels' chances in the Wild Card in a heated debate.

When the New York Yankees cleaned their plate with a sweep earlier this season, the New York Mets turned it right around, sweeping the Tampa Bay Rays in stunning fashion. How about the last week of June? The Mets won four straight to close out the month, bringing them two and a half games back.